Kevbad the Bad
Amiable Bowel Syndrome
Yes, and in the street, and at gunpoint. Not a Muslim, though.Ever been searched at an airport?
Yes, and in the street, and at gunpoint. Not a Muslim, though.Ever been searched at an airport?
muslims are a minority in the UK and experience discrimination in a variety of ways here, potentially including by military intervention of ancestral homelands depending on heritage. yes skin colour is a key defining factor, but skin colour as a factor intersects with many other variables - someone with the same skin colour and ethnic heritage may play cricket and vote tory and laugh along with racist comments they occasionally experience and not experience the hostility of a practicing muslim who has a beard and wears robes to mosque, for example.Islam is not a minority religion everywhere in the world. In some parts it is definitely the majority, or only, religion. When it is, it can be very oppressive for non-Muslims and indeed for those Muslims who are deemed apostates or heretics. It shouldn't be left off the hook just because Islam is a minority religion here in Britain. At the same time I am not advocating senselessly attacking Muslim individuals or communities.
Anyway, and I could be wrong here, I don't think that Muslim communities are particularly oppressed here because of their religion but because of their skin colour or national origins. If I am wrong, please enlighten me how someone adhering to Islam is more oppressed than an atheist like myself.
It does bring up interesting issues but you have to conflate mulitple contexts to get these "interventions" to make any kind of sense in most cases that I can think of immediately. I'll google the stuff that SnG suggested later and see how other myths fit (or don't) within them.I dont think theyre theories as much as "feminist literary interventions" for want of a better word IYSWIM
These events didnt happen, the original texts are what they are, but by retelling and reframing it it brings up interesting issues
Reminded me of reading about this:muslims are a minority in the UK and experience discrimination in a variety of ways here, potentially including by military intervention of ancestral homelands depending on heritage. yes skin colour is a key defining factor, but skin colour as a factor intersects with many other variables - someone with the same skin colour and ethnic heritage may play cricket and vote tory and laugh along with racist comments they occasionally experience and not experience the hostility of a practicing muslim who has a beard and wears robes to mosque, for example.
Of course Islam shouldnt be left off the hook, thats what i was saying. I was making the point that a bit of sensitivity is needed so its not misconstrued as part of all the other oppressive attacks muslims might experience here in blighty.
Rafiq's claim against Yorkshire alleges he was given a racist nickname by his team-mates and that other racist comments were directed at players from an ethnic minority background, including the term "P***", with the phrase "go back where you came from" also used.
It alleges that Yorkshire failed to respect ethnic beliefs of Pakistani players and players of Pakistani descent, "including the non-provision of Halal food facilities and attempts to enforce the drinking culture of the club on them".
It is alleged that in one incident players and officials laughed in response to alcohol being thrown on a Muslim child at a match.
I'm not trying to be pedantic or difficult here, but the beard and robes are part of cultural heritage, not an intrinsic part of Islam. Others from the same part of the world may dress similarly and get similar negative responses yet adhere to a different or no faith at all.muslims are a minority in the UK and experience discrimination in a variety of ways here, potentially including by military intervention of ancestral homelands depending on heritage. yes skin colour is a key defining factor, but skin colour as a factor intersects with many other variables - someone with the same skin colour and ethnic heritage may play cricket and vote tory and laugh along with racist comments they occasionally experience and not experience the hostility of a practicing muslim who has a beard and wears robes to mosque, for example.
Of course Islam shouldnt be left off the hook, thats what i was saying. I was making the point that a bit of sensitivity is needed so its not misconstrued as part of all the other oppressive attacks muslims might experience here in blighty.
If he wasn't, then who built that airport outside of Nottingham, eh?
Saying something 'provocative" is one thing and doing what Edie claims he did is another.I like and admire Danny, but it was very clear that he said something deliberately provocative to make his point.
Ok, I think he was being needlessly provocative, and using the concept of rape in a way that was intended to offend Christians.Saying something 'provocative" is one thing and doing what Edie claims he did is another.
Fair point, wouldn't want to downplay what Burchill did, was more focused on saying why what danny was doing wasn't the sameI think that's underplaying what Burchill has done. It was an obsessive campaign against an individual and really weird sexual one at that.
Where you know there are likely to be Muslims eating, providing food they can eat is a basic courtesy, and very easy to do. I don't think that is too much to ask. Any hospital, for instance, will have halal options.Yes, halal food might not be always readily provided, but neither is vegetarian or vegan or gluten-free.
Yes I was.I like and admire Danny, but it was very clear that he said something deliberately provocative to make his point.
Don’t tag her, she said she wanted to leave the thread as it upsets her. That’s fair enough.Saying something 'provocative" is one thing and doing what (edie) claims he did is another.
I was pointing out the deep, deep engrained misogyny in many Bible stories and thereby in mainstream Christian morality. I picked one which it turns out I had a poor scriptural grasp of, but the point remains. The misogyny is there, and it has seeped down into even the more liberal interpretations of Christianity today. Indeed even this post Christian society we live in still struggles with those values it inherits from the Abrahamic past, for example women “asking for it” with “provocative” clothing or behaviour. That comes straight from those sources.Ok, I think he was being needlessly provocative, and using the concept of rape in a way that was intended to offend Christians.
I sometimes feel a bit sorry for KillerB, who in the unlikely event of him ever logging back in here will find a deluge of alerts from people who were hoping to tag me. Then I read his single post here and don't care so much.As someone has already said (@KillerB or @littlebabyjesus I think),
My phone is determined to capitalise some things I don’t want capitalised. I apologise for dialling the wrong number.I sometimes feel a bit sorry for KillerB, who in the unlikely event of him ever logging back in here will find a deluge of alerts from people who were hoping to tag me. Then I read his single post here and don't care so much.
I know we fundamentally disagree on these issues - and that doesn’t make you a bad person, just wrong - but try to focus on things I’ve actually said instead of getting wound up about stuff somebody hypothetical might have said sometime in history. I already took the piss out of you for association fallacy, but now you’re stretching it beyond breaking point.naah, I just think that - whether put in those crude four words or in fifty after a quibble and a caveat - it isn't really worth saying. It's, on a par with 'the Jews killed Jesus' or 'well, Hitler was a Zionist until he went mad and did the holocaust.' It wont win anyone over and is actually more likely to push them away.
I was pointing out the deep, deep engrained misogyny in many Bible stories and thereby in mainstream Christian morality. I picked one which it turns out I had a poor scriptural grasp of, but the point remains. The misogyny is there, and it has seeped down into even the more liberal interpretations of Christianity today. Indeed even this post Christian society we live in still struggles with those values it inherits from the Abrahamic past, for example women “asking for it” with “provocative” clothing or behaviour. That comes straight from those sources.
These are all good points. And whatever Luke says, what I was told in Catechism did differ, but I wish I’d picked another example.The scripture isn't very clear (what a shock!) And Mary couldn't really have given her consent - she was probably about 13 years old and had been taught to obey men. A male angel told her she was going to have a baby. We are told that she was frightened. Then she submitted. Did she have a choice?
The scripture isn't very clear (what a shock!) And Mary couldn't really have given her consent - she was probably about 13 years old and had been taught to obey men. A male angel told her she was going to have a baby. We are told that she was frightened. Then she submitted. Did she have a choice?
Is the mob also burning a straw man?What danny la rouge said, whilst undeniably provocative and no doubt offensive to many, doesn't come in the context of mobs of fascists marching around the streets beating up people who "look like Christians" chanting "Jesus is a rapist!" over and over again.
But that's the thing innit, the Christian Church isn't a singular institution and hasn't been since at least 1054. So while I broadly agree with you there, I think it's very possible to do "provocations against christianity" that do function as lobbing bricks at an oppressed minority, especially in the NI context.Danny's point was obviously a crude provocation, but I don't think it's anything like equivalent to Burchill's racist attacks on Sarkar.
Kenan Malik makes the point that what's often called an offence to a community is actually a debate within a community, and I think that's something that has some relevance here. While we may choose to be atheists in the UK, the christian church still exercises a huge amount of political and social control and influence over the communities we live in. The christian church is in our schools, in our legislative chambers, on our national broadcaster. In Northern Ireland, women are unable to freely access abortions because of the enduring influence of the church.
Criticisms of and provocations against christianity by people living in the UK - and anywhere the church still exercises political and social control - are not lobbing bricks at an oppressed minority, they are attacks against a powerful institution.
Shit, I've now looked this one up and realised I was led astray by Nottingham's habit of sticking Robin Hood on everything. It was actually Doncaster airport that Robin Hood built, apologies for any confusion caused there.Robin Hood built East Midlands Airport?
Is the mob also burning a straw man?
Shit, I've now looked this one up and realised I was led astray by Nottingham's habit of sticking Robin Hood on everything.
of course. in the same way that it is possible to do 'provocations against Islam' that perform that function. For example, Julie Burchill.But that's the thing innit, the Christian Church isn't a singular institution and hasn't been since at least 1054. So while I broadly agree with you there, I think it's very possible to do "provocations against christianity" that do function as lobbing bricks at an oppressed minority, especially in the NI context.
One of my former flatmate's colleagues was tripping once and found god hidden away in a breadbin
I came across a friend of mine who was tripping on the beach. He was very indignant because a rock had just told him to get a haircut.
This is true, though the NI context you talk about is a conflict between two different strands of non-monolithic christianity. Both strands of which are currently voting to enforce (or at least not to challenge) abortion restrictions in the province.But that's the thing innit, the Christian Church isn't a singular institution and hasn't been since at least 1054. So while I broadly agree with you there, I think it's very possible to do "provocations against christianity" that do function as lobbing bricks at an oppressed minority, especially in the NI context.
As a devotee I regard this not so much as confusion as a provocation.Shit, I've now looked this one up and realised I was led astray by Nottingham's habit of sticking Robin Hood on everything. It was actually Doncaster airport that Robin Hood built, apologies for any confusion caused there.